News
DOUBLE CELEBRATION FOR MACGLIDE FESTIVAL OF SAILS’ STALWART
Published Sun 26 Jan 2020
Billy Parker had double the reason to celebrate yesterday at the MacGlide Festival of Sails.
The Royal Geelong Yacht Club stalwart celebrated his 82nd birthday yesterday with a big day at sea. He and his crew won the Cruising Non-Spinnaker division in the 34 nautical mile Passage Race from Williamstown to Geelong.
Two hundred and forty-five boats - Grand Prix racing yachts, cruiser/racer keelboats, multihulls, classic yachts and trailer sailors - charged off two long lines for the Passage Race, the largest single start of a yacht race in the southern hemisphere.
The Passage Race was the curtain-raiser to the 177th MacGlide Festival of Sails.
Billy, who has been sailing for more than 70 years, won the 2018 Passage Race in the Cruising Division, on-board his boat Kestrel of Gosford. RGYC’s oldest competing sailor, he is also expected to be one of the oldest competitors at this weekend’s three-day festival.
“The day was absolutely terrific. It was very special to win on my 82nd birthday,” he said.
“My favourite part was when the wind change came in and we got a lot of wind which made us go faster.”
“I started sailing when I was about 11 at Williamstown Sailing Club and I sailed there until I was 17. I then went away for seven years in the Navy before I came back and started sailing again for about five years,” he remembers.
“I then started a business and dropped out of sailing for about 25 years, before getting involved again in Williamstown,” he said.
“The first Festival I ever did was in the 1960s on someone else’s boat and it was a really tight regatta.”
“Eventually I came to Geelong and started sailing here and bought a boat. I competed in Festival of Sails 20-odd years ago with that boat for the first time.”
“In that first race, the Passage Race from Williamstown to Geelong, I snapped a boom in half. In the intervening years I think I have sailed about 15 Festival of Sails and didn’t place, but in 2018 I won my Division (Cruising) in the Passage Race, just after my 80th birthday.”
“It’s relaxing but at times it can be challenging. I think it is great,” Mr Parker said of sailing.
Mr Parker said he loved the atmosphere of the MacGlide Festival of Sails.
“Everyone’s happy and there’s good camaraderie. I just think it’s a great sport. It’s a relaxing sport,” he said.
“I found when I still had the business I could come down here and go sailing and you forgot about everything – you were just out there racing.”
MacGlide Festival of Sails Chairman, Stuart Dickson, said sailing was an inclusive sport which catered for young children just starting out in Cadets, right up to veteran sailors like Mr Parker.
“It’s also a unique sport as it is something families can enjoy doing together.”
Thousands of people are expected to flock to the Geelong waterfront again today to enjoy plenty of action and live entertainment.
The family-friendly Festival includes a smorgasbord of exciting activations and experiences from live music to “come and try” activities such as discover sailing and virtual reality sailing.
The MacGlide Festival of Sails continues in Geelong until tomorrow afternoon.